When people say there’s been an “𝑥 fold increase in such and such.” They mean such and such is 𝑥 times as big.

If you get something that actually folds like a sheet of paper, the amount of layers doubles each time. One fold = twice as many layers. Two folds = four times as many layers…

    • sp3ctr4l
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      2 days ago

      Yeah, 'number’fold words in modern English are actually linguistic hold overs from before ‘fold’ was a verb that meant to bend something along a crease.

      https://www.etymonline.com/word/twofold

      In a whole bunch of proto-English languages, fold or feald or fald or falt were all multiplicative suffixes (basically) attached to a number, which made a new word meaning to multiply by the number.

      I’d be willing to bet this is also why the phrase ‘doubled over’ literally means that a person is bent, or folded at their abdomen.

      You take the new meaning of fold (to bend along a crease) but replace it with the word that twofold literally means (doubled).

      If you interpreted ‘doubled over’ as literally as OP is taking twofold, then the phrase should mean that a person was above something and then spontaneously grew a clone of themselves, or became twice as heavy or tall or something.

          • Zagorath
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            92 days ago

            It took me way too long to realise you weren’t asserting an unorthodox answer to the nondeterministic polynomial time problem.

            • sp3ctr4l
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              31 day ago

              haha sorry!

              My wrist is pretty messed up, and sometimes, it basically seizes up, so I went back to 15 yrs ago txt message dialect…

              And then after posting it I realized, oh that could be confused with… ah fuck it time to ice my wrist and do more massage.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 days ago

            I read that as “NP != D” and spent far too long trying to figure out what the variables N, P, and D were in this context.

      • @toynbee
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        32 days ago

        In case you’re not already a fan, I bet you’d like Robwords.